August 14, 2013

Potent mechanism helps viruses shut down body's defense system against infection

Salk Institute findings may lead to new broad-spectrum antiviral drugs

索尔克新闻


Potent mechanism helps viruses shut down body’s defense system against infection

Salk Institute findings may lead to new broad-spectrum antiviral drugs

LA JOLLA, CA—Researchers at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies have discovered a powerful mechanism by which viruses such as influenza, West Nile and Dengue evade the body’s immune response and infect humans with these potentially deadly diseases. The findings may provide scientists with an attractive target for novel antiviral therapies.

Published in the August 2013 issue of the journal Cell Host and Microbe, the findings describe a novel mechanism that this group of so-called “enveloped viruses” uses to disarm the host’s innate immune response. The mechanism the scientists uncovered is based on these viruses activating a class of molecules, known as TAM receptors, which are located on the outside of certain immune cells.

In the immune system, TAM receptors are used by cells, such as macrophages and dendritic cells, to clean up dead cells, and they are also central inhibitors of the body’s innate immune response to bacteria, viruses and other pathogens.

The Salk scientists found that a substance called phosphatidylserine (PtdSer), which is found on the surface of enveloped viruses (viruses with an outer wrapping of a lipid membrane), binds to extracellular proteins and activates TAM receptors on immune cells. In dendritic cells, a type of immune cell that interacts with T and B cells to initiate the adaptive immune response, TAM receptor activation turns off a set of genes called interferons that play a key role in antiviral defense.

John Young, Erin Lew, Greg Lemke, Anna Zagorska, John Naughton

From left: John Young, Erin Lew, Greg Lemke, Anna Zagórska, John Naughton

图片:由萨克生物研究所提供

“Our findings suggest a unique way in which TAM receptors contribute to the establishment of viral infection by disabling the interferon response,” says co-lead study author John A.T. Young, ,索尔克研究所的教授 诺米斯基金会免疫生物学与微生物病原学实验室. “As a consequence, the interferon-stimulated defense genes are not turned on, rendering the target cell more permissive for virus infection.”

This is a previously unknown mechanism for enveloped viruses, which are very common, to inhibit the body’s normal antiviral response. Since PtdSer exposure seems to be a general feature of enveloped viruses, the researchers say many different viruses may use the mechanism to counteract the cellular antiviral response in cells with TAM receptors.

Understanding this mechanism allows researchers to work on developing broad-spectrum antiviral drugs that prevent viruses from shutting down the interferon response in cells by blocking TAM receptor activation. In their study, the Salk scientists tested a small-molecule drug called BMS-777607, initially developed for anti-cancer therapy, that does just that.

“With this small molecule, viruses can’t activate TAM receptors, so they can’t shut down the interferon response,” says co-lead author Greg Lemke, ,索尔克研究所的教授 分子神经生物学实验室 and the Françoise Gilot-Salk Chair, in whose laboratory TAM receptors were discovered.

With other scientists around the country, the Salk researchers are testing a variety of small molecule drugs in series of different viruses, including West Nile, Dengue, influenza, Ebola, Marburg, and hepatitis B. These drugs work, in large part, by blocking the virus’ ability to activate TAM receptors, thereby leaving the interferon-mediated antiviral response intact.

“This is a completely novel approach,” says Young, who holds the Nomis Foundation Chair at Salk. “It is a way of exploiting a normal piece of the cellular machinery in the immune system to block virus infections.” And, if it works, it may prove to be an effective treatment to clear enveloped viruses during the acute phase of infection and perhaps also in chronic virus infections.

Other researchers on the study were co-first authors Suchita Bhattacharyya and Anna Zagórska, as well as Erin D. Lew and John Naughton, from the Salk Institute; Bimmi Shrestha and Michael S. Diamond of Washington University; and Carla V. Rothlin of Yale University.

这项研究得到了...的支持 美国国立卫生研究院, the Nomis and Auen Foundations, the James B. Pendleton Charitable Trust, a Salk Institute innovation grant, the Human Frontiers Science Program, ,和 白血病和淋巴瘤协会.


关于索尔克生物研究所:

索尔克生物研究所是世界顶尖的基础研究机构之一,其国际知名的教职人员在一个独特、协作和富有创造性的环境中,深入探究生命科学的基本问题。索尔克科学家们致力于发现和指导未来几代研究人员,通过研究神经科学、遗传学、细胞和植物生物学以及相关学科,在癌症、衰老、阿尔茨海默氏症、糖尿病和传染病的认识方面做出了开创性的贡献。.

学院取得了许多成就,获得了包括诺贝尔奖和美国国家科学院院士在内的无数荣誉。该研究所由脊髓灰质炎疫苗先驱 Jonas Salk 博士于 1960 年创立,是一家独立的非营利组织和建筑地标。.

出版信息

日记

Cell Host and Microbe

标题

Viruses disable innate immune responses in dendritic cells via direct activation of TAM receptors

作者

Suchita Bhattacharyya, Anna Zagórska, Erin D. Lew, Bimmi Shrestha, Carla V. Rothlin, John Naughton, Michael S. Diamond, Greg Lemke, and John A.T. Young

研究领域

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